Timothy Granville-Chapman
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General Sir Timothy Granville-Chapman KCB CBE ADC Gen (born 5 January 1947) is currently Vice-Chief of the Defence Staff of the British Armed Forces.
After education at Charterhouse and the University of Cambridge, Granville-Chapman was commissioned into the Royal Artillery in 1968 and served at regimental duty until 1973. A tour as an instructor at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and a staff job in Military Operations in the Ministry of Defence preceded Staff College. Tours post Staff College included being Military Assistant to the Commander 1 (BR) Corps, command of an independent anti-tank battery in Germany, membership of the directing staff at the Staff College and command of a Royal Horse Artillery regiment in Germany. As a Colonel, after attending the Higher Command and Staff Course, he became an Assistant Director in the Defence Policy Staff in the Ministry of Defence, having first, as Chief of the General Staff's author, written the first version of the British Military Doctrine. Prior to attending the Royal College of Defence Studies]] he commanded an armoured brigade in Germany and afterwards was for a short while Director of Army Staff Duties. He became Assistant Chief of the General Staff in 1994 and in 1997 was appointed to create the new Joint Service Command and Staff College, closing the former single-service staff colleges and negotiating the permanent location for the new Staff College at Shrivenham in the process. He returned to the Army Board as Adjutant General in 2000. He was knighted in the New Year's Honours List in 2001.
Military Offices | ||
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Preceded by: Sir Anthony Bagnall |
Vice-Chief of the Defence Staff 2005–Present |
Succeeded by: Current Incumbent |
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